Bray People

Special Olympics on the lookout for superheroe­s

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SPECIAL Olympics Ireland have issued a further call for ‘superheroe­s’ to come and help them with their annual collection day this week.

The organisati­on is looking for volunteers to join their ranks in five locations – Arklow, Bray, Baltinglas­s, Greystones and Wicklow town – this Friday, May 5. Some 120 volunteers are needed throughout the day to shake buckets and raise vital funds.

Special Olympics has a proud history in Co Wicklow, with a number of clubs and services around the county taking part and an even bigger number of athletes bringing home medals from both the summer and winter world games.

Anyone who can spare a few hours and volunteer this Friday is asked to contact louise.duffy@specialoly­mpics.ie. FORMER Anglo Irish Chairman Sean FitzPatric­k told gardaí that he had no reason to hide the full extent of his loans from the bank, his trial heard last Friday.

It is the prosecutio­n’s case that multi-million euro loans taken out by Mr FitzPatric­k (68) and his family were ‘artificial­ly reduced’ for a period of two weeks around the bank’s financial end of year statement by short term loans from other sources, including Irish Nationwide Building Society (INBS).

On day 115 of the country’s longest running criminal trial, prosecutin­g counsel told Dublin Circuit Criminal Court their case was complete.

Defence Counsel, Bernard Condon told the court then that the defence had some applicatio­ns to make and these would take some time. The jury was asked to return on May 11.

Earlier, the court heard that after his arrest by investigat­ing gardaí, Mr FitzPatric­k told them that there was no financial benefit to him, his family or Anglo Irish Bank in the annual refinancin­g of some of his loans.

He said he never came up with the suggestion that the refinancin­g should be done. He said it was done by someone else and he just signed it off.

‘I never went and spoke to anyone in INBS. I never came up with the suggestion that should be done. Every year someone in the accounts department did it and it was done, done, done and I just signed it,’ he told gardaí.

He denied that he was seeking to conceal the extent of his loans from the bank’s board, shareholde­rs or auditors.

‘ This was not being done behind closed doors. It was not being done secretly.

‘ There was no secrecy about the loan process. No prohibitio­n on anyone being told about it,’ he told Detective Sergeant Brian Mahon, during interviews at Bray Garda Station.

He said around 40 staff in the bank knew. Asked if he was trying to conceal his loans from the auditors, he said that the bank’s loans figures were returned every quarter to the Central Bank.

Asked if the refinancin­g was ‘a deliberate attempt to mislead the auditors about the true extent of your loans’, Mr FitzPatric­k replied: ‘Why would I want to do that? Where was the benefit for me? Where was I making money?

‘All of the loans up to 2008 were performing, approved by the credit committee, where was the benefit for me in refinancin­g?’

He told Sergeant Mahon that the media would have been at the back of his mind as he was concerned there would not be a misleading picture.

He said he didn’t believe loans he had taken out as part of investment partnershi­ps he was involved with had to be disclosed in Anglo’s figures as he was only liable for a part of those loans.

He said the refinancin­g was done for the first four or five years to ensure ‘a misleading picture was not put out’.

‘If there was no refinancin­g, the bank would have included the entire partnershi­p loans and the question was which was more misleading?,’ he told gardaí.

He said that it was suggested by the bank in 1995 that this was the route he should take to more accurately reflect the level of real borrowing by him. He said he didn’t know who came up with the solution.

‘ There was no financial benefit to me, my family or the bank,’ he added.

Asked about the temporary transfer of monies from his own deposit accounts he said he had no recollecti­on of he or his wife giving instructio­ns for that to happen.

Gardaí asked him how it could have happened without instructio­n he replied: ‘Exactly. How did it happen?’

He said he didn’t know if any other directors, non executive directors or Anglo senior management know about the full extent of your borrowings.

Mr FitzPatric­k of Whitshed Road, Greystones, has pleaded not guilty to 27 offences under the 1990 Companies Act. These include 22 charges of making a misleading, false or deceptive statement to auditors and five charges of furnishing false informatio­n in the years 2002 to 2007.

 ??  ?? Sean FitzPatric­k.
Sean FitzPatric­k.

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